Jove
Visualize
お問い合わせ
このページは機械翻訳されています。他のページは英語で表示される場合があります。View in English
  1. ホーム
  2. 研究分野
  3. エンジニアリング
  4. 流体力学と熱工学
  5. 流体構造相互作用とエアロアコースティック
  6. 電子ホットスポットを冷やします.
  1. ホーム
  2. 研究分野
  3. エンジニアリング
  4. 流体力学と熱工学
  5. 流体構造相互作用とエアロアコースティック
  6. 電子ホットスポットを冷やします.

関連する実験動画

High-resolution Thermal Micro-imaging Using Europium Chelate Luminescent Coatings
09:01

High-resolution Thermal Micro-imaging Using Europium Chelate Luminescent Coatings

Published on: April 16, 2017

7.7K

電子ホットスポットを冷やします.

Liwen Sang

    Nature
    |March 5, 2024
    まとめ

    No abstract available in PubMed .

    キーワード:
    エンジニアリング材料科学テクノロジー

    さらに関連する動画

    Fabrication and Testing of Microfluidic Optomechanical Oscillators
    09:10

    Fabrication and Testing of Microfluidic Optomechanical Oscillators

    Published on: May 29, 2014

    12.2K
    Measurement of Vibration Detection Threshold and Tactile Spatial Acuity in Human Subjects
    07:32

    Measurement of Vibration Detection Threshold and Tactile Spatial Acuity in Human Subjects

    Published on: September 1, 2016

    12.7K

    関連する実験動画

    High-resolution Thermal Micro-imaging Using Europium Chelate Luminescent Coatings
    09:01

    High-resolution Thermal Micro-imaging Using Europium Chelate Luminescent Coatings

    Published on: April 16, 2017

    7.7K
    Fabrication and Testing of Microfluidic Optomechanical Oscillators
    09:10

    Fabrication and Testing of Microfluidic Optomechanical Oscillators

    Published on: May 29, 2014

    12.2K
    Measurement of Vibration Detection Threshold and Tactile Spatial Acuity in Human Subjects
    07:32

    Measurement of Vibration Detection Threshold and Tactile Spatial Acuity in Human Subjects

    Published on: September 1, 2016

    12.7K

    関連する概念動画

    Generating Electromagnetic Radiations01:10

    Generating Electromagnetic Radiations

    2.9K
    The German physicist Heinrich Hertz (1857–1894) was the first to generate and detect certain types of electromagnetic waves in the laboratory. Starting in 1887, he performed a series of experiments that confirmed the existence of electromagnetic waves and verified that they travel at the speed of light. Hertz used an alternating-current RLC (resistor-inductor-capacitor) circuit that resonated at a known frequency and connected it to a loop of wire. High voltages induced across the gap in...
    2.9K
    Standing Waves in a Cavity01:28

    Standing Waves in a Cavity

    919
    A household microwave and lasers are examples of standing electromagnetic waves in a cavity. When two conducting metal plates are placed parallel at the nodal planes, it creates a cavity where standing waves are formed. The cavity between the two planes is analogous to a stretched string held at the points x = 0 and x = L. Here, the distance 'L' between the two planes must be an integer multiple of half of the wavelength. The wavelengths that satisfy this condition are given by:
    919
    IR Spectrum Peak Splitting: Symmetric vs Asymmetric Vibrations01:08

    IR Spectrum Peak Splitting: Symmetric vs Asymmetric Vibrations

    1.0K
    Identical bonds within a polyatomic group can stretch symmetrically (in-phase) or asymmetrically (out-of-phase). Similar to hydrogen bonding, these vibrations also influence the shape of the IR peak. Generally, asymmetric stretching frequencies are higher than symmetric stretching frequencies. For example, primary amines exhibit two distinct IR peaks between 3300–3500 cm−1 corresponding to the symmetric and asymmetric N-H stretching, while secondary amines exhibit a single...
    1.0K
    Standing Electromagnetic Waves01:15

    Standing Electromagnetic Waves

    1.5K
    Electromagnetic waves can be reflected; the surface of a conductor or a dielectric can act as a reflector. As electric and magnetic fields obey the superposition principle, so do electromagnetic waves. The superposition of an incident wave and a reflected electromagnetic wave produces a standing wave analogous to the standing waves created on a stretched string.
    Suppose a sheet of a perfect conductor is placed in the yz-plane, and a linearly polarized electromagnetic wave traveling in the...
    1.5K
    Electromagnetic Fields01:30

    Electromagnetic Fields

    2.1K
    Electric fields generated by static charges, often referred to as electrostatic fields, are characteristically different from electric fields created by time-varying magnetic fields. While the former is a conservative field, implying that no net work is done on a test charge if it goes around in a complete loop in the field, the latter is, by definition, not a conservative field; net work is done, and it is proportional to the rate of change of magnetic flux.
    However, the observation of...
    2.1K
    Induced Electric Fields01:23

    Induced Electric Fields

    3.7K
    The fact that emfs are induced in circuits implies that work is being done on the conduction electrons in the wires. What can possibly be the source of this work? We know that it’s neither a battery nor a magnetic field, as a battery does not have to be present in a circuit where current is induced, and magnetic fields never do any work on moving charges. The source of the work is in fact an electric field that is induced in the wires. For example, if a stationary conductor is placed in a...
    3.7K
    JoVE
    x logofacebook logolinkedin logoyoutube logo
    JoVEについて
    概要リーダーシップブログJoVEヘルプセンター
    著者向け
    出版プロセス編集委員会範囲と方針査読よくある質問投稿
    図書館員向け
    推薦の声購読アクセスリソース図書館諮問委員会よくある質問
    研究
    JoVE JournalMethods CollectionsJoVE Encyclopedia of Experimentsアーカイブ
    教育
    JoVE CoreJoVE BusinessJoVE Science EducationJoVE Lab Manual教員リソースセンター教員サイト
    利用規約
    プライバシーポリシー
    ポリシー